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Consulting Research& Advisory
KENNEDY
Talent Management Leadership in Professional Services Firms
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Consulting Research& Advisory
KENNEDY
Table of Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Challenges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Talent Management Framework . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Next Step – Where to Start . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
About Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Talent Management Leadership in Professional Services Firms3
Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory ©2010 BNA Subsidiaries, LLC
Talent Management Leadership in Professional Services Firms
Introduction
What are the signs of a highly successful professional services firm? Surprisingly, they are relatively easy to
identify. Walk into the offices of a firm or engage with a project team in a workshop and you quickly notice
something unique. These firms have a unique culture, flowing with energy and a passion for the work that they do,
along with a commitment and purpose for engaging with the client. Team members work well together and
collaborate effectively. They are proud of the firm, and they believe that they provide a special value proposition to
their clients.
More than any other industry, professional services is dependent on the skills, creative innovation and collaboration of
its workforce in order to deliver services and solutions to clients. Market cycles have a major impact on talent
management initiatives and this cycle is no different. It is during these cycles when talent management pays off.
While voluntary turnover has slowed due to difficult economic times, employees within firms who have not paid
attention to cultural fit, motivation and mission will find their employees more frustrated with their roles, less
confident in the direction of the firm and more likely to leave as the market begins to grow.
This paper identifies the market trends driving the need for new talent management priorities and provides a talent
management framework. It also outlines key metrics that firms can manage as well as key initial steps.
Challenges
Professional services firms – including consulting, IT, tax and audit firms – face numerous challenges moving forward.
More sophisticated procurement strategies and technology productivity strategies are changing the way services are
won and delivered. Within any specific professional services market, the ability to adapt and manage quality talent to
meet client needs will be necessary in order to remain competitive over the next decade. This will have a profound
impact on talent management strategies. Consider the following major trends in the market today.
Buying patterns demand integrated capabilities
As senior management places greater focus on professional service decisions, they are demanding more complex
solutions. To achieve this goal, consultants must develop offerings that incorporate multiple capabilities. These
projects may be delivered by one firm and can have implications across multiple geographies. Professional services
firms must re-organize their delivery models and practices to extend these value propositions for clients. This is
leading to more complex interrelationships between practices with talent management implications. The two most
significant challenges are:
How does aligning teams to fluidly work across traditional boundaries impact the organization’s culture? •
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What are the capability requirements to meet these new demands?•
For example, Figure 1 demonstrates how senior management is more involved with decision-making processes from
corporate strategy through business planning requirements. Historically, corporate or business strategies would be
delivered as discrete projects while projects involving financial strategy, marketing and branding or IT strategy and
planning remained somewhat discrete.
Projects have been shifting towards more integrated approaches. A business unit strategy will incorporate marketing,
operational and financial strategies along with IT alignment implications. The acquisition of a new business will
involve organizational alignment, new operational processes, IT and marketing alignment, along with tax implications
for specific decisions. To remain competitive, firms must provide rapid answers to more complex problems, or they
must partner with other external firms or internal customer groups to address these problems.
North America faces significant challenges with multi-functional service demands, particularly in the consulting
industry with larger clients. Even if one professional services firm does not win the entire project, it is more common
for multiple firms to work together on the execution of a large transformational initiative. In Europe, this trend is
even more complicated due to the development of the integrated European economy. In order to remain competitive,
professional services firms are following clients outside of their home country to provide services in other countries.
For the past decade, professional services organizations have been undergoing changes and have faced the challenges of
industrialization within their markets. Firms are continuously pushed to modify service delivery models in order to
improve efficiency. Leveraging tools, organizing intellectual property and global resources are now the model for
competing in today’s market.
Figure 1. Integrated Capabilities
CEO
The Board
Executives
Business Units
MarketingFinance IT
Operations
Functional Activities
Interrelationships:Strategy•
M&A, divestitures•
Advisory •
Performance management•
Business planning•
IT Strategy•
Translation of strategy to plan •
Flexible Skills•
Common Mission•
Common Culture•
Source: Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory
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Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory ©2010 BNA Subsidiaries, LLC
A lack of leadership impedes employee motivation and sense of mission
Without proper communication from leadership during challenging times, employees feel a lack of awareness of
opportunities (perhaps a specific project or a role) that could enhance their career goals. They may begin to question
the overall mission of the firm. Is it changing or is it simply a temporary thing? This lack of transparency can dampen
motivation and the overall sense of mission. This overall impact is a lack of focus.
With limited flexibility to stretch resources with growth opportunities, more effort is placed on sales initiatives and
ensuring current clients are happy, it is easy for leaders to focus only on the business metrics and not on strategic
talent management objectives. Most managers and leaders monitor turnover, staffing management, profitability and,
of course, the work itself. Many managers themselves may be concerned about their own situation. It is in this
environment that employees lack an understanding of where they fit in the organization and whether or not they are
an important part of the plan moving forward.
In order to avoid this problem, leadership must carefully monitor employees, listen to their feedback, respond to the
issues and identify a plan to maintain confidence and an overall understanding of the situation, as well as provide
one-to-one communication with employees. Leadership can address this situation through consistent career
management, mentoring and ongoing communication of the firm’s mission. This is important in order for employees
to have a personal comfort level regarding how they fit within the organization.
Weak resource management systems hamper the ability to manage talent
Despite progress to improve management activities and optimize resource planning, many professional services firms
continue to employ a simplistic talent management process. There are several reasons for this. First, many firms do
not have the adequate systems to capture and manage the information. Second, many firms lack any ongoing
management processes. This approach results in a more time consuming process for leadership and a lack of
awareness regarding opportunities for employees.
The lack of a systematic approach limits management’s ability to address necessary initiatives and objectives that will
identify, nurture and motivate employees. Metrics provide structure and benchmarks; and leadership is able to
develop an organization built on common cultural values, a common mission and a motivation to succeed.
Combined with the proper capabilities, these professional services firms are positioned for high levels of performance.
The end result is a more talented and motivated work force with the cultural traits to sustain leadership for the long
run.
Talent Management Framework
Despite a significant investment, many professional service firms do not manage their talent as well as they should.
They will track turnover, compensation levels and conduct an annual satisfaction survey. Many firms will provide
ongoing training and thorough review cycles, and they will assess the career direction of their top performers. But
many professional services firms would agree that they do not address talent management challenges with the proper
level of sophistication. Too often talent management is left to the human resources department and top executives.
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Professional services firms with leading talent management practices take it a step further. Talent management is at
the core of leadership and management activities. These are leadership and management-based initiatives practiced by
the entire management team. These initiatives include:
Presenting a clear, strategic • mission and strategy to be the best at something.
Ensuring that employees have the • motivation by empowering them to achieve professional and personal success.
Focusing on the quality and • capability of employees within the firm.
Targeting a rigorous decision-making • culture with a unique set of conduct, personality and interaction traits,
which produce effective results and attract employees to work in the environment.
Figure 2 illustrates talent management initiatives and the foundation supporting the Talent Management Framework.
Mission
Employees need to believe that everyone in the organization is striving to achieve the same goals and objectives.
Leadership must provide clear direction on what the firm wants to become. The mission needs to be a statement that
the organization is passionate about and discuss where they believe that they can deliver a competitive value
proposition. If an employee is passionate about the mission and they have faith in the firm’s capabilities to deliver on
that mission, it represents a powerful anchor for employees to stay with the firm. Management should monitor the
understanding and confidence of the mission on a regular basis in order to ensure that strategic and tactical steps in
strategy and communication are working.
Figure 2. Talent Management Framework
Source: Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory
Core TalentManagementInitiatives
TalentManagementFoundation
Mission: A clear strategic company direction and targeted goals have been communicated that employees embrace and want to be part of
Motivation: Employees have a sense of purpose and believe that the firm will support them in meeting career and personal goals
Cultural Fit: The firm provides the conduct, values, and commitments to create a comfortable and productive work environment that employees embrace
Capability: Possess the skills, quality, flexibility and management talent to meet operational, financial and competitive goals
HR Systems: HR systems to acquire, develop and retain talent
Culture: Cultural characteristics for performance such as collaboration, teamwork and innovation
Organizational Support: Firm systems, processes, tools, IP and organi-zational support to be successful
Leadership: To provide the differ-entiation that makes the firm unique
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Motivation
Motivation incorporates the management and leadership activities that make an employee want to work hard, improve
and be as productive as they can be. These activities are effective when an employee sees that:
Rewards are linked to performance.•
Career advancement is linked to performance.•
The firm will support employees who strive for career advancement.•
The firm will support employees if they must balance work and personal challenges.•
When an employee believes that the firm’s leadership supports these objectives, it creates a higher level of
commitment to the firm’s success. Ultimately, this leads to greater rewards and success for the employee. However,
employees, who do not believe in this organization-wide commitment, will be less likely to provide the passion and
extra effort it takes to make clients and the firm more successful.
Capability
Capability measures human capital. This includes the ability of the firm to deliver value to clients as well as the ability
to respond to change. What are these employees good at? How strong are their communication skills? How well can
they adapt to different situations? Do they demonstrate leadership and management potential? Do they provide the
flexibility on teams to ensure success? Improved understanding of capabilities helps management to prepare for
fluctuations in service demand, the ability to compete in adjacent service markets and the ability to compete for
higher quality projects. As a result of the economic downturn, flexibility has risen to be an important measurement
for employees. Capability is also critical from an alignment and depth standpoint. A professional services firm that
develops a reputation of deep expertise in specific areas creates an excellent marketing opportunity to attract
additional quality talent.
Culture
If a successful firm has a great mission, strong capabilities and effective processes to motivate employees, they are
likely to be successful in the short-run. Motivated talent can be very productive and deliver strong value to clients.
However, the special link that makes firms competitive for the long run is culture. Culture defines the “who” in the
organization. It defines the firm’s values and unique traits that support highly productive and resilient organizations.
There is no specific formula for cultural fit and it often depends on the nature of the expertise, the style of leadership
and types of buyers a firm is targeting. But regardless of the final formula, it is important that this formula is applied
across the organization. Cultural fit develops the consistency and expectations that each employee expects from
everyone else. If these values and traits are inconsistent or don’t measure up, it can stifle organizational energy, stall
innovation, impede decision-making and ultimately impact the success of the organization and the attraction of the
firm to both current and potential employees. A strong cultural fit creates an atmosphere where people want to stay
and it has an impact on philosophies for performance and goals.
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Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory ©2010 BNA Subsidiaries, LLC
Talent Management Foundation
Underneath these leadership activities are the talent management foundation components. While the core talent
management leadership activities are the critical areas of measurement, focus and activity, the foundation includes the
core activities and infrastructure to manage the talent management process. Two foundation categories, HR systems
and organizational support, involve the systems, processes and infrastructure to manage talent. Organizational
support extends beyond HR because management activities, offering development and client processes all play into
the talent management process. The other two foundation areas, culture and leadership, center on the communication
and design of the organization.
Integrating Talent Management Leadership into the Talent Management Framework
Talent must be positioned as core to the overall firm not just human resources. The foundation or the talent
management supply network is the role of leadership, their ability to cultivate a culture of success, develop the
appropriate strategy for the firm and communicate the mission and goals to employees. HR systems, the organiza-
tional structure and processes, culture and leadership are all positioned to develop and nurture these assets. By
improving communication between people and leadership, the possibilities for alignment improve across critical issues
such as career enhancement, leadership development, flexible career paths, succession planning and rewards.
Talent Management Metrics
Most talent management initiatives focus on the core activities for managing talent. Traditional metrics capture
performance criteria to assess:
Are our employees happy?•
How many employees have left in the past year?•
Are they getting the training they want?•
Are they getting the training they need?•
Are we training them to become leaders?•
How much does it cost to find and train people?•
These are key measurements, but they do not get at what it will take to align, motivate and incent employees to
perform over a longer retention cycle. Therefore the core talent management initiatives identified in this paper need
their own metrics for leadership to monitor and manage. Examples of these future talent management metrics are
provided in Figure 3.
The impact of talent management leadership is summarized in Figure 4. Each of the initiatives outlined in this paper
are interlinked and impact a variety of factors for a professional services business. Our evaluation concludes that it is
important to consider how combinations of core leadership activities work together to deliver business results. For
example, the combination of both capability and motivation has a significant impact on the quality of services and the
overall client value obtained from projects. Essentially, highly motivated employees with the right combination of
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skills and talent are well positioned to meet these objectives.
Improving recruiting and retention is dependent on improving the sense of mission and cultural fit of employees
within the firm. Current and prospective employees who are attracted to overall company values and objectives are
more likely to want to stay with the firm even as challenges arise over the course of the career with the firm.
Mission and motivation provide the focus to achieve the performance and results necessary to meet the targeted areas
of leadership. Passionate about the mission of the firm, a highly motivated base of employees will drive towards these
goals with a laser focus.
Culture and capability provide a critical combination for the long term. An organization with the quality and the
necessary skills, along with the traits to operate as a successful firm, possess the flexibility from a capability standpoint
to change. They possess the flexibility from a cultural standpoint to collaborate, communicate, analyze and make the
Source: Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory
Figure 3. Traditional vs. Future Talent Management Metrics
Traditional Talent Management Metrics
Satisfaction • Job Satisfaction • Leadership Satisfaction • Career Advancement Satisfaction
Turnover • Voluntary Turnover % • Involuntary Turnover % • Professional Staff Terminated % • Sales Staff Terminated % • Manager Staff Terminated % • Corporate Staff Terminated %
Staffing Analysis • Offer Acceptance Rate • Replacement Positions Filled • Incremental Positions Filled • Cost To Fill Professional Position • Cost To Fill Sales Position • Cost To Fill Management Position• Cost To Fill Corporate Staff Position • Days To Fill
Career Management • % Of Employees Promoted• Hiring Manager Satisfaction • Quality Of Hire
Future Talent Management Metrics
Cultural Fit • Company Values Understood % • Strong Teamwork Within Project Teams % • Strong Teamwork Across Organization % • Committed To The Success Of The Firm % • Operate As Collaborative Organization % • Committed To The Success Of Customers %
Capability • Have The Necessary Resources % • Have The Necessary Talent % • Client Satisfaction % • Confidence In Management Talent %
Motivation • Rewards Are Linked To Performance % • Firm Supports Career Goals % • Firm Supports Personal Goals %
Mission• Company Has Unique Value Proposition %• Understand The Goals Of The Firm % • Unit Understands Goals And Objectives % • Excited About Firm Mission %
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necessary decisions to support change for the future.
Productivity, innovation and growth are three other areas of quantifiable business impact supported by all four talent
management initiatives. Quality supports higher rates; client value provides higher win rates; focus delivers execution
superiority. Culture and capability are critical for innovation, mission and motivation and play an important role.
Next Steps – Where to Start
The path towards talent management leadership requires improvements to these initiatives, the foundation and
measurement systems. Planning small targeted improvements will lead to immediate results and support longer-term
initiatives. However, instilling the right leadership process and enacting measurement processes are required to be
successful.
Step 1. Focus on smaller, quick-hit, high-impact initiatives with a focus on motivation and capability
It is difficult to prioritize one talent management leadership over another. However, executing on culture and
fine-tuning a firm’s mission can take time. In the short term:
Conduct capability mapping of employees.a.
Focus on career enhancement and training programs for most valued employees.b.
Incorporate a flexible career path framework.c.
These steps will quickly address the quality of talent and projects and convey a message around employee
Figure 4. Business Impact of Talent Management Initiatives
Source: Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory
Overall Recruiting Quality-Productivity Retention Client Value-Innovation-Growth
Focus
Flexibility-Collaboration-Ability to Change
MISSION MOTIVATION
CULTURE CAPABILITY
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commitment, which will improve motivation.
Step 2. Prepare to execute on the broader core talent management leadership process
Leadership must prepare the entire management team to prioritize talent management as a core process of the firm. This a.
will require the following:
Communicate long-term talent management strategy to employees.b.
Develop leadership processes and priorities to engage with employees.c.
Structure core culture priorities for performance measurement and recruiting.d.
Enact mentoring and management support processes.e.
Clarify and communicate firm goals to support the mission.f.
Step 3. Enact a talent management leadership measuring process
Information is essential in order for management to take the right steps to succeed with its talent management leadership
process. Steps must be taken to organize the proper mechanism and collect information on an ongoing basis to provide
management with the necessary information to take action on talent management initiatives.
Step 4. Identify and make necessary improvements in talent management foundation areas
Most likely, leadership and culture need to be addressed; however, the more complicated decisions will be centered on the HR
systems and organizational processes that must be improved. This will be based on the current systems and processes in place as
well as the competitive landscape of the firm. If a professional services firm is in an environment where flexibility and change
are important, or if recruiting and retention will be critical issues over the next 12-18 months, it will impact the direction of
investments and initiatives. Information and management processes will be very important in order to support these initiatives.
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Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory ©2010 BNA Subsidiaries, LLC
About Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory
Since 1970, Kennedy has been the world's leading source of market analysis on the Management Consulting and IT Consulting industries.
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Established in 1970 as a division of what would be the media company Kennedy Information, the business unit in 2008
was renamed Kennedy Consulting Research & Advisory to reinforce its focus on proprietary research and custom
advisory work for buyers and sellers of consulting services.